Chapter 3
What Meditation Is
Meditation is a word, and words are used in different ways by different
speakers. This may seem like a trivial point, but it is not. It is quite
important to distinguish exactly what a particular speaker means by the words
he uses. Every culture on earth, for example, has produced some sort of mental
practice which might be termed meditation. It all depends on how loose a
definition you give to that word. Everybody does it, from Africans to Eskimos.
The techniques are enormously varied, and we will make no attempt to survey
them. There are other books for that. For the purpose of this volume, we will
restrict our discussion to those practices best known to Western audiences and
most likely associated with the term meditation.
Within the Judeo-Christian tradition we find two overlapping practices called
prayer and contemplation. Prayer is a direct address to some spiritual entity.
Contemplation in a prolonged period of conscious thought about some specific
topic, usually a religious ideal or scriptural passage. From the standpoint of
mental culture, both of these activities are exercises in concentration. The
normal deluge of conscious thought is restricted, and the mind is brought to
one conscious area of operation. The results are those you find in any
concentrative practice: deep calm, a physiological slowing of the metabolism
and a sense of peace and well-being.
Out of the Hindu tradition comes Yogic meditation,
which is also purely concentrative. The traditional basic exercises consist of
focusing the mind on a single object a stone, a candle flame, a syllable or
whatever, and not allowing it to wander. Having acquired the basic skill, the
Yogi proceeds to expand his practice by taking on more complex objects of
meditation chants, colorful religious images, energy channels in the body and
so forth. Still, no matter how complex the object of meditation, the meditation
itself remains purely an exercise in concentration.
Within the Buddhist tradition, concentration is also highly valued. But a new
element is added and more highly stressed. That element is awareness. All
Buddhist meditation aims at the development of awareness, using concentration
as a tool. The Buddhist tradition is very wide, however, and there are several
diverse routes to this goal. Zen meditation uses two separate tacks. The first
is the direct plunge into awareness by sheer force of will. You sit down and
you just sit, meaning that you toss out of your mind everything except pure
awareness of sitting. This sounds very simple. It is not. A brief trial will
demonstrate just how difficult it really is. The second Zen approach used in
the Rinzai school is that of
tricking the mind out of conscious thought and into pure awareness. This is
done by giving the student an unsolvable riddle which he must solve anyway, and
by placing him in a horrendous training situation. Since he cannot flee from
the pain of the situation, he must flee into a pure experience of the moment.
There is nowhere else to go. Zen is tough. It is effective for many people, but
it is really tough.
Another stratagem, Tantric Buddhism, is nearly the reverse. Conscious thought,
at least the way we usually do it, is the manifestation of ego, the you that you usually think that you are. Conscious thought
is tightly connected with self-concept. The self-concept or ego is nothing more
than a set of reactions and mental images which are artificially pasted to the
flowing process of pure awareness. Tantra seeks to
obtain pure awareness by destroying this ego image. This is accomplished by a
process of visualization. The student is given a particular religious image to
meditate upon, for example, one of the deities from the Tantric pantheon. He
does this in so thorough a fashion that he becomes that entity. He takes off
his own identity and puts on another. This takes a while, as you might imagine,
but it works. During the process, he is able to watch the way that the ego is
constructed and put in place. He comes to recognize the arbitrary nature of all
egos, including his own, and he escapes from bondage to the ego. He is left in
a state where he may have an ego if he so chooses, either his own or whichever
other he might wish, or he can do without one. Result: pure awareness. Tantra is not exactly a game of patty cake either.
Vipassana is the oldest of Buddhist meditation
practices. The method comes directly from the Sitipatthana
Sutta, a discourse attributed to Buddha himself. Vipassana is a direct and gradual cultivation of
mindfulness or awareness. It proceeds piece by piece over a period of years.
The student's attention is carefully directed to an intense examination of
certain aspects of his own existence. The meditator
is trained to notice more and more of his own flowing
life experience. Vipassana is a gentle technique. But
it also is very , very thorough. It is an ancient and
codified system of sensitivity training, a set of exercises dedicated to
becoming more and more receptive to your own life experience. It is attentive
listening, total seeing and careful testing. We learn to smell acutely, to
touch fully and really pay attention to what we feel. We learn to listen to our
own thoughts without being caught up in them.
The object of Vipassana practice is to learn to pay
attention. We think we are doing this already, but that is an illusion. It
comes from the fact that we are paying so little attention to the ongoing surge
of our own life experiences that we might just as well be asleep. We are simply
not paying enough attention to notice that we are not paying attention. It is
another Catch-22.
Through the process of mindfulness, we slowly become aware of what we really
are down below the ego image. We wake up to what life really is. It is not just
a parade of ups and downs, lollipops and smacks on the wrist. That is an
illusion. Life has a much deeper texture than that if we bother to look, and if
we look in the right way.
Vipassana is a form
of mental training that will teach you to experience the world in an entirely
new way. You will learn for the first time what is truly happening to you,
around you and within you. It is a process of self discovery, a participatory
investigation in which you observe your own experiences while participating in
them, and as they occur. The practice must be approached with this attitude.
"Never mind what I have been taught. Forget about theories and
prejudgments and stereotypes. I want to understand the true nature of life. I
want to know what this experience of being alive really is. I want to apprehend
the true and deepest qualities of life, and I don't want to just accept
somebody else's explanation. I want to see it for myself." If you pursue
your meditation practice with this attitude, you will succeed. You'll find
yourself observing things objectively, exactly as they are--flowing and
changing from moment to moment. Life then takes on an unbelievable richness
which cannot be described. It has to be experienced.
The Pali term for Insight meditation is Vipassana Bhavana. Bhavana comes from the root 'Bhu',
which means to grow or to become. There fore Bhavana means to cultivate, and
the word is always used in reference to the mind. Bhavana
means mental cultivation. 'Vipassana' is derived from
two roots. 'Passana' means seeing
or perceiving. 'Vi' is a prefix with the complex set of connotations.
The basic meaning is 'in a special way.' But there also is the connotation of
both 'into' and 'through'. The whole meaning of the word is looking into
something with clarity and precision, seeing each component as distinct and
separate, and piercing all the way through so as to perceive the most
fundamental reality of that thing. This process leads to insight into the basic
reality of whatever is being inspected. Put it all together and 'Vipassana Bhavana' means the
cultivation of the mind, aimed at seeing in a special way that leads to insight
and to full understanding.
In Vipassana mediation we cultivate this special way
of seeing life. We train ourselves to see reality exactly as it is, and we call
this special mode of perception 'mindfulness.' This process of mindfulness is
really quite different from what we usually do. We usually do not look into
what is really there in front of us. We see life through a screen of thoughts
and concepts, and we mistake those mental objects for the reality. We get so
caught up in this endless thought stream that reality flows by unnoticed. We
spend our time engrossed in activity, caught up in an eternal pursuit of
pleasure and gratification and an eternal flight from pain and unpleasantness.
We spend all of our energies trying to make ourselves feel better, trying to
bury our fears. We are endlessly seeking security. Meanwhile, the world of real
experience flows by untouched and untasted. In Vipassana meditation we train ourselves to ignore the
constant impulses to be more comfortable, and we dive into the reality instead.
The ironic thing is that real peace comes only when you stop chasing it. Another Catch-22.
When you relax your driving desire for comfort, real fulfillment arises. When you
drop your hectic pursuit of gratification, the real beauty of life comes out.
When you seek to know the reality without illusion, complete with all its pain
and danger, that is when real freedom and security are yours. This is not some
doctrine we are trying to drill into you. This is an observable reality, a
thing you can and should see for yourself.
Buddhism is 2500 years old, and any thought system of that vintage has time to
develop layers and layers of doctrine and ritual. Nevertheless, the fundamental
attitude of Buddhism is intensely empirical and anti-authoritarian. Gotama the Buddha was a highly unorthodox individual and
real anti-traditionalist. He did not offer his teaching as a set of dogmas, but
rather as a set of propositions for each individual to investigate for himself.
His invitation to one and all was 'Come and See'. One of the things he said to
his followers was "Place no head above your own". By this he meant,
don't accept somebody else's word. See for yourself.
We want you to apply this attitude to every word you read in this manual. We
are not making statements that you would accept merely because we are
authorities in the field. Blind faith has nothing to do with this. These are
experiential realities. Learn to adjust your mode of perception according to
instructions given in the book, and you will see for yourself. That and only
that provides ground for your faith. Insight
meditation is essentially a practice of investigative personal discovery.
Having said this, we will present here a very short synopsis of some of the key
points of Buddhist philosophy. We make not attempt to be thorough, since that
has been quite nicely done in many other books. This material is essential to
understanding Vipassana, therefore, some mention must be made.
From the Buddhist point of view, we human beings live in a very peculiar
fashion. We view impermanent things as permanent, though everything is changing
all around us. The process of change is constant and eternal. As you read these
words, your body is aging. But you pay no attention to that. The book in you hand is decaying. The print is fading and the pages are
becoming brittle. The walls around you are aging. The molecules within those
walls are vibrating at an enormous rate, and everything is shifting, going to
pieces and dissolving slowly. You pay no attention to that, either. Then one
day you look around you. Your body is wrinkled and squeaky and you hurt. The
book is a yellowed, useless lump; the building is caving in. So
you pine for lost youth and you cry when the possessions are gone. Where
does this pain come from? It comes from your own inattention. You failed to
look closely at life. You failed to observe the constantly shifting flow of the
world as it went by. You set up a collection of mental constructions, 'me',
'the book', 'the building', and you assume that they would endure forever. They
never do. But you can tune into the constantly ongoing change. You can learn to
perceive your life as an ever- flowing movement, a thing of great beauty like a
dance or symphony. You can learn to take joy in the perpetual passing away of
all phenomena. You can learn to live with the flow of existence rather than
running perpetually against the grain. You can learn this. It is just a matter
of time and training.
Our human perceptual habits are remarkably stupid in some ways. We tune out 99%
of all the sensory stimuli we actually receive, and we solidify the remainder
into discrete mental objects. Then we react to those mental objects in
programmed habitual ways. An example: There you are, sitting alone in the
stillness of a peaceful night. A dog barks in the distance. The perception
itself is indescribably beautiful if you bother to examine it. Up out of that sea of silence come surging waves of sonic vibration.
You start to hear the lovely complex patterns, and they are turned into
scintillating electronic stimulations within the nervous system. The process is
beautiful and fulfilling in itself. We humans tend to ignore it totally.
Instead, we solidify that perception into a mental object. We paste a mental
picture on it and we launch into a series of emotional and conceptual reactions
to it. "There is that dog again. He is always barking at night. What a
nuisance. Every night he is a real bother. Somebody should do something. Maybe
I should call a cop. No, a dog catcher. So, I'll call
the pound. No, maybe I'll just write a real nasty letter to the guy who owns
that dog. No, too much trouble. I'll just get an ear plug." They are just
perceptual and mental habits. You learn to respond this way as a child by
copying the perceptual habits of those around you. These perceptual responses
are not inherent in the structure of the nervous system. The circuits are
there. But this is not the only way that our mental machinery can be used. That
which has been learned can be unlearned. The first step is to realize what you
are doing, as you are doing it, and stand back and quietly watch.
From the Buddhist perspective, we humans have a backward view of life. We look
at what is actually the cause of suffering and we see it as happiness. The
cause of suffering is that desire- aversion syndrome which we spoke of earlier.
Up pops a perception. It could be anything--a beautiful girl, a handsome guy,
speed boat, thug with a gun, truck bearing down on you, anything. Whatever it
is, the very next thing we do is to react to the stimulus with a feeling about
it.
Take worry. We worry a lot. Worry itself is the problem. Worry is a process. It
has steps. Anxiety is not just a state of existence but a procedure. What
you've got to do is to look at the very beginning of that procedure, those
initial stages before the process has built up a head of steam. The very first
link of the worry chain is the grasping/rejecting reaction. As soon as some
phenomenon pops into the mind, we try mentally to grab onto it or push it away.
That sets the worry response in motion. Luckily, there is a handy little tool
called Vipassana meditation which you can use to
short-circuit the whole mechanism.
Vipassana meditation teaches us how to scrutinize our
own perceptual process with great precision. We learn to watch the arising of
thought and perception with a feeling of serene detachment. We learn to view
our own reactions to stimuli with calm and clarity. We begin to see ourselves
reacting without getting caught up in the reactions themselves. The obsessive
nature of thought slowly dies. We can still get married. We can still step out
of the path of the truck. But we don't need to go through hell over either one.
This escape from the obsessive nature of thought produces a whole new view of
reality. It is a complete paradigm shift, a total change in the perceptual
mechanism. It brings with it the feeling of peace and rightness, a new zest for
living and a sense of completeness to every activity. Because of these
advantages, Buddhism views this way of looking at things as a correct view of
life and Buddhist texts call it seeing things as they really are.
Vipassana meditation is a set of training procedures
which open us gradually to this new view of reality as it truly is. Along with
this new reality goes a new view of the most central aspect of reality: 'me'. A
close inspection reveals that we have done the same thing to 'me' that we have
done to all other perceptions. We have taken a flowing vortex of thought,
feeling and sensation and we have solidified that into a mental construct. Then
we have stuck a label onto it, 'me'. And forever after, we threat
it as if it were a static and enduring entity. We view it as a thing separate
from all other things. We pinch ourselves off from the rest of that process of
eternal change which is the universe. And than we
grieve over how lonely we feel. We ignore our inherent connectedness to all
other beings and we decide that 'I' have to get more
for 'me'; then we marvel at how greedy and insensitive human beings are. And on
it goes. Every evil deed, every example of heartlessness in the world stems
directly from this false sense of 'me' as distinct from all else that is out
there.
Explode the illusion of that one concept and your whole universe changes. Don't
expect to do this overnight, though. You spent your whole life building up that
concept, reinforcing it with every thought, word, and deed over all those
years. It is not going to evaporate instantly. But it will pass if you give it
enough time and enough attention. Vipassana
meditation is a process by which it is dissolved. Little by little, you chip
away at it just by watching it.
The 'I' concept is a process. It is a thing we are doing. In Vipassana we learn to see that we are doing it, when we are
doing it and how we are doing it. Then it moves and fades away, like a cloud
passing through the clear sky. We are left in a state where we can do it or not
do it, whichever seems appropriate to the situation. The compulsiveness is
gone. We have a choice.
These are all major insights, of course. Each one is a deep- reaching
understanding of one of the fundamental issues of human existence. They do not
occur quickly, nor without considerable effort. But
the payoff is big. They lead to a total transformation of your life. Every
second of your existence thereafter is changed. The meditator
who pushes all the way down this track achieves perfect mental health, a pure
love for all that lives and complete cessation of suffering. That is not small
goal. But you don't have to go all the way to reap benefits. They start right
away and they pile up over the years. It is a cumulative function. The more you
sit, the more you learn about the real nature of your won existence. The more
hours you spend in meditation, the greater your ability to calmly observe every
impulse and intention, every thought and emotion just as it arises in the mind.
Your progress to liberation is measured in cushion-man hours. And you can stop
any time you've had enough. There is no stick over your head except your own
desire to see the true quality of life, to enhance your own existence and that
of others.
Vipassana meditation is inherently experiential. It is
not theoretical. In the practice of mediation you become sensitive to the
actual experience of living, to how things feel. You do not sit around
developing subtle and aesthetic thoughts about living. You live. Vipassana
meditation more than anything else is learning to live.
About the Author - Preface - Introduction - Chapter 1 - Chapter 2 - Chapter 3 -
Chapter 4 - Chapters 5 -
Chapter 6 - Chapter 7 - Chapter 8 - Chapter 9 - Chapter 10 – Chapter 11 – Chapter 12 - Chapter 13 - Chapter 14 - Chapter 15 - Chapter 16 - Distribution Agreement